Here’s a question: How long have Republicans been
running for federal office on repealing Obamacare, in Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell’s terminology, “Root and branch”?

Answer: since 2010.

. . .

You would figure that with Donald Trump in the
White House and Republican majorities in the House and Senate, repealing
Obamacare would be a no-brainer.

OK, the repeal-and-replace angle could be harder
to pull off. That’s understandable. There are lots of different kinds of
Republicans, and it might be hard to get all of them to coalesce behind a
single federal healthcare policy to replace it. Those of us whose studies of
the American public sector have led to an understanding that the less federal
healthcare policy there is the healthier the healthcare industry will be have
a far
simpler solution to that problem, but we are unfortunately not the majority
— in the House, Senate or public. That’s a shame, and it’s a symptom of a
larger civic disease, but that’s for another column in this space. There will
be a replacement for Obamacare, and we can hope it’s less awful than what it
stands in for.

But when the Senate version of an Obamacare
replacement foundered and McConnell announced the next step would be, early
next week, an up-or-down vote for an Obamacare repeal now and the crafting of a
replacement as a consensus for one emerges, that’s something an entire GOP
caucus can vote for.

Minus Susan Collins, of course; Maine’s
quote-unquote Republican Senator wouldn’t vote to repeal Obamacare back in 2015
when McConnell’s majority sent a bill doing just that to then-President Obama’s
desk to die. But outside of Collins and Mark Kirk of Illinois, who is no longer
in the Senate, the rest of the caucus was on board with the repeal.

And yet Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski, West Virginia’s
Shelley Moore Capito, and Ohio’s Rob Portman have now joined Collins in announcing
they won’t support a repeal when the vote comes up next week.

What is wrong with these people?

Capito laced her announcement with a special bit
of arsenic for Republican voters. “I didn’t come to Washington to hurt people,”
she said.

No, Senator, apparently you came to Washington to
lie to people.

. . .

What’s wrong with these people? My guess in one word: Uniparty. And the rest of Scott McKay's article is here.